Remi Fani-Kayode

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Succeeded byNone
Preceded byDauda Adegbenro
Succeeded byUnknown
Born(1921-12-22)22 December 1921
Chelsea, England
Remilekun Fani-Kayode
Deputy Premier of Western Nigeria
In office
1963–1966
Succeeded byNone
Minister for Local Government Affairs
In office
1963–1966
Preceded byDauda Adegbenro
Succeeded byUnknown
Personal details
Born(1921-12-22)22 December 1921
Chelsea, England
DiedOctober 1995 (1995-11)
Brighton, England
SpouseAdia Adunni Fani-Kayode
ChildrenRemi Aurora Fani-Kayode Rotimi Fani-Kayode
Femi Fani-Kayode
Adetokumbo Fani-kayode
Jean-Luc Bressard-Kayode (nee Fani-Kayode)
ProfessionLawyer

Chief Victor Babaremilekun Adetokunboh Fani-Kayode// , Q.C., SAN, CON (22 December 1921 – October 1995) was a Nigerian politician, aristocrat, nationalist, statesman and lawyer. He was elected deputy premier of the Western Region of Nigeria in 1963[1][2] and played a major role in Nigeria's legal history and politics from the late 1940s until his death in 1995.[1][3][4]

Fani-Kayode hailed from a prominent and well educated Yoruba family of Ife, stock from south-western Nigeria. His grandfather, the Rev. Emmanuel Adedapo Kayode, was an Anglican Priest, who had got his Master of Arts degree from Fourah Bay College, which at that time was part of Durham University. This happened in 1885. His father, Victor Adedapo Kayode, studied law and graduated from Selwyn College, Cambridge in 1921. He was called to the Middle Temple in 1922, and went on to become a prominent lawyer and then judge, in Nigeria.[5] His mother was Mrs. Aurora Kayode, née Fanimokun, who was the daughter of Rev. Joseph Fanimokun, also an Anglican priest. He had also got his Master of Arts degree from Fourah Bay College and later went on to become the principal of CMS Grammar School in Lagos, serving from 1896 to 1914.[1] This was a missionary school that was founded by Bishop Samuel Ajayi Crowther.[6]

In July 1958, he successfully moved the motion for Nigeria's independence in the Federal House of Assembly in Lagos. He argued that independence should take place on 2 April 1960[7][8] (the minutes of Hansard, 1958; Richard Sklar's Nigeria's political parties: Power in an Emergent African Nation, World Press, p. 269; p. 269; Professor Onabamiro's Glimpses in Nigeria's History, p. 140). In 1959, there was a further motion that was moved in the Nigerian Parliament, asking for a slight amendment to the Fani-Kayode motion of July 1958. This new motion, which was moved by Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, asked that the 2 April 1960 date for independence, which had already been accepted and approved by Parliament and which had been acquiesced to by the British colonial authorities, should be shifted from 2 April 1960 to 1 October 1960 instead. This motion of amendment was subsequently passed and approved by the Parliament and it was also acquiesced to by the British. That was how the date for Nigeria's independence, 1 October 1960, was finally arrived at.[8]

Education and professional life

After the completion of his study at King's College, Lagos, Fani-Kayode went to Downing College at the University of Cambridge, in 1941. He did the British Bar examinations and came top in his year for the whole of the British Commonwealth.[1] He was called to the British Bar at the Middle Temple in 1945 and was appointed Queen’s Counsel in 1960, becoming the third and youngest Nigerian to receive the title. Later, in 1977, he was made a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), becoming the third Nigerian to achieve this distinction.[1]

In 1948, he set up the first indigenous Nigerian law firm, "Thomas, Williams and Kayode",[9] with two other lawyers Frederick Rotimi Williams and Bode Thomas, who had been trained at Cambridge and London University, respectively.[1][2] In 1970, he established another law firm "Fani-Kayode and Sowemimo" with his old friend, Chief Sobo Sowemimo S.A.N.[9]

Political career

Family

References

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